Day 6: Action Items


Information Literacy

Information Literacy is the ongoing process of sifting, organizing, analyzing and evaluating information and individuals in your PLN. According to the
University of Idaho, information literacy is "the ability to identify what information is needed, understand how the information is organized, identify the best sources of information for a given need, locate those sources, evaluate the sources critically, and share that information."

Improving your information literacy skills is critical to maximizing the potential of your PLN. With the wealth of information and resources available online, it can be hard figuring out where to find information, what information and educators are credible and trustworthy, and being able to organize the information you learn so you are not overwhelmed.

Here are some information literacy tips for building a PLN:
  • Start with well-known website (i.e., Edutopia) and see what blogs/websites are mentioned (follow those) and who is contributing to the website (add these individuals to your social network)
  • Look for websites with thousands of subscribers and good reviews
  • Look critically at the information (if it doesn’t make sense or the writer does not seem to know what he/she is doing, delete that source from your PLN)
  • Organize your information/contacts to prevent information overload
  • Building a PLN should be an ongoing process - add resources, delete resources, build, grow (don't stay stagnant). If your career interest or the subject level you teach changes, add more resources/contacts to your PLN and delete the ones that are no longer applicable.

Critical Consumption

Howard Rheingold has produced a video and written various articles about critical consumption or "crap detection" (source). Critical consumption is the idea of figuring out who is trustworthy. In an online world where anyone can make a website, expertise has shifted from the individuals that write and publish books to everyone. However, not everyone is as trustworthy as they seem (this is an important lesson for you AND your students). So how do you determine whether the author of the text you read is credible? Do an Internet search of his/her name. See what other individuals have to say about that person. See what else that person has published. Do other individuals link to this author's articles? Who does this author cite in his/her article?

Take the Crap Test to help you with information literacy: http://www.workliteracy.com/pages/the-crap-test/

Information Literacy Video



Reading/Additional Sites


Discussion Forum